Monday, July 1, 2013

Top Stories - Google News: Southern city in Egypt takes on Islamists - Businessweek

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Southern city in Egypt takes on Islamists - Businessweek
Jul 1st 2013, 22:33

ASSIUT, Egypt (AP) — The southern Egyptian city of Assiut has long been a haven for radical Islamists, and its Christian minority has largely kept a low profile. That all changed this weekend.

An estimated crowd of 50,000 packed the streets this weekend to join protests calling for President Mohammed Morsi's ouster, prompting a violent response that left three people dead.

The show of defiance can only be fairly measured in view of the city's bloody history and the shifts in the local centers of power when Morsi became president a year ago, empowering many of the hard-line Islamist groups around the country, including those in Assiut.

The bloody end of the protest — 32 people were also injured — points to the high risks that Assiut residents, particularly Christians, face if they were to join the wave of opposition to Morsi's rule that culminated Sunday when millions of Egyptians came out across the country to demand his ouster.

"I, my kids Mariam and Remon and my husband, Nabil, came out because we miss the Egypt we know and we want it back," Assiut resident Mary Demian said. "These people (militant Muslims) say we are infidels and they terrorize us, but we are not scared. This is our nation and we have always lived with Muslims in peace."

The size of Sunday's rally was nearly five times the demonstration that celebrated the ouster of Hosni Mubarak in February 2011. But what is equally important is that the protesters showed a level of defiance and courage that may have been unthinkable just days ago.

It defined a change of mood in a city of 1 million people where political activism has traditionally been the exclusive domain of the powerful Islamists of Gamma Islamiya, a hard-line group that fought a bloody insurgency against Mubarak's regime in the 1990s. The insurgency left more than 1,000 people dead, including foreign tourists and Christians.

The group, born in Assiut in the 1970s, has since renounced violence and set up a political party after Mubarak's ouster, joining a new political landscape dominated by Islamists. Thousands of its members were jailed under Mubarak's 29-year rule. It is now one of the strongest allies of Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood.

Adding to the combustible mix, Christians in Assiut province make up about a third of its 4 million people. In all of Egypt, Christians make up about 10 percent of the estimated 90 million people.

In that context, Assiut can be a major flashpoint if the two sides decide to fight it out. Islamists across much of the country were mobilizing their supporters Monday night after the chief of the armed forces gave Morsi and his opponents 48 hours to work out their differences. If they don't, warned Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the military will intervene with a political road map of its own for the nation's future.

In the meantime, millions of Morsi opponents are rallying for a second day in a row, filling Cairo's Tahrir Square, the thoroughfare outside Morsi's presidential palace, and elsewhere in the country.

Sunday's events in Assiut underline the city's potential as a main battlefield in the fight between the two sides.

Significantly, the anti-opposition rally was held in tandem and in close proximity to another one by Gamaa Islamiya, whose members toured the city on motorbikes chanting "Down with the saboteurs!" before they gathered near a government building only 50 yards from the opposition rally.

"Our rally was a message to everyone that we are here on the streets doing what our conscience dictates to us and that we shall not allow saboteurs to do what they wish," said Tareq Beder, the Gamaa official in charge of Assiut.

In the run-up to the opposition rally, several activists also received threatening text messages. "All of you infidels will die," said one, sent to Christian activist Joseph Amin.

The protesters burned posters of Morsi and Assem Abdel-Maged, a longtime leader of Gamaa.

"Oh Assiut, tell the terrorists that Muslims and Christians are united!" they chanted. "Down, down with Assem Abdel-Maged the terrorist!" they screamed.

Abdel-Maged, a native of Assiut, has been taking the lead in a campaign to discredit Morsi's critics, delivering fiery speeches that brand them as communists, extremist Christians and paid Mubarak loyalists.

The violence began soon after the festive rally got underway when a suspected Islamist riding behind another man on a motorbike opened fire on the crowd, killing a 21-year-old Christian man, Abanob Atef, and injuring 11. Protesters used the blood from the fatal head wound to write on the ground "Erhal!" or "Leave!" — the chant of the Arab Spring protesters now directed at Morsi.

Enraged by the violence, many of the protesters moved to the nearby villa housing the local branch of the Freedom and Justice party, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Suspected Morsi supporters in the villa opened fire on the protesters, killing two more and injuring another 21, according to security officials speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. Fighting continued with the protesters pelting the villa with firebombs and rocks. Policemen, angered by the death of one of their own, joined the fight on the side of the protesters.

The fighting continued for hours, with the police occasionally retreating because of heavy gunfire. Morsi's supporters, some wearing construction helmets and homemade body armor, shot at the protesters and police from pickup trucks and motorbikes that came in waves.

Both the Gamaa and the Muslim Brotherhood in Assiut have denied involvement in the violence.

Violence resumed Monday, with about 3,000 anti-Morsi protesters storming and torching the villa housing the Freedom and Justice party.

___

Hendawi reported from Cairo.

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Top Stories - Google News: Zimmerman trial: Lead detective takes stand - CBS News

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Zimmerman trial: Lead detective takes stand - CBS News
Jul 1st 2013, 22:40

Sanford police officer Chris Serino identifies George Zimmerman in the courtroom during the 16th day of Zimmerman's trial in Seminole circuit court July 1, 2013 in Sanford, Florida.

/ Photo by Joe Burbank-Pool/Getty Images

(CBS) -- Investigators closely questioned murder suspect George Zimmerman about whether he followed Trayvon Martin and whether he was in fear for his life in a videotaped recording of a Feb. 29, 2012 police interview played in court Monday.

"You basically jumped out of the car to see where he was going. That's not fear," said detective Chris Serino in the videotape.

PICTURES: George Zimmerman on trial in death of Fla. teen

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READ: Trayvon Martin Shooting: A timeline of events

Serino, the lead detective in the investigation, took the stand Monday afternoon. The jury watched the videotaped interview as Serino testified. They also watched a video of Zimmerman's re-enactment of the fatal altercation taped by police in his Sanford, Fla. gated community the day after the shooting.

In the Feb. 29 interview tape, Serino and Det. Doris Singleton - who took the stand just before Serino - questioned Zimmerman about his assertion that he was afraid of Martin and didn't want to confront him.

"Did you ask what this person was doing out there?" Serino asks Zimmerman on the tape.

"No sir. I didn't want to confront him and it wasn't my job."

On the video, the detectives also question him about the profanity-laced language he used on non-emergency call to describe suspicious people in his neighborhood - f---ing punks and these ---holes.

Zimmerman said he was referring to people that "victimize the neighborhood."

On the tape, detectives played portions of the call.

"You want to catch him. You want to catch the bad guy," Serino said. "F---ing punk can't get away. Did you pursue this kid? Did you want to catch him?"

Zimmerman said no.

VIDEO: Zimerman trial: Prosecutor opens with profanity

Singleton asked Zimmerman again about why he left his car, implying the non-emergency call painted a different picture than the account he gave her immediately following the altercation. Earlier in the day Monday, the court heard an audio recording of the Feb. 26 interview as Singleton testified.

"You did not tell me that you said 'Oh (expletive), he's running, and you got out of the car at the same time," Singleton said on the Feb. 29 videotape. "You told me the only reason you got out of the car was to get an address."

Singleton repeatedly questioned Zimmerman as to whether he thought Martin might have been afraid of him.

"Can you see how that might frighten him, you'd been following him? Do you think he was scared? Do you think he thought you were trying to hurt him?," asks Singleton in the video. 

Monday evening, defense attorney Mark O'Mara was cross-examining Serino. Court was expected to recess at 6 p.m. and resume again Tuesday morning, with more testimony from Serino.


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Sunday, June 30, 2013

Top Stories - Google News: Heat Wave in the West Brings Fires, Travel Delays and a Death - New York Times

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Heat Wave in the West Brings Fires, Travel Delays and a Death - New York Times
Jul 1st 2013, 00:46

Joshua Lott for The New York Times

People seeking refuge from the heat on Sunday went tubing on the Salt River in Arizona, east of Phoenix. The temperature in the city reached 119 degrees.

PHOENIX — An unforgiving heat wave held much of the West in a sweltering embrace over the weekend, tying or breaking temperature records in several cities, grounding flights, sparking forest fires and contributing to at least one death.

An elderly man was found dead on Saturday in a home without air-conditioning in Las Vegas, where the city's temperature reached 115 degrees, tying the record for the hottest June 29 since 1994. Also, more than 200 people attending an outdoor concert there were treated for heat-related problems that day, 34 of them at hospitals, the authorities said.

At trailheads at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada, park rangers were trying to dissuade people from hiking the same area where a Boy Scout troop leader died of heat exposure early last month, when temperatures were lower.

At Death Valley National Park in California, whose temperature of 134 degrees a century ago stands as the highest ever recorded in the world, the digital thermometer became a busy tourist attraction over the weekend. The forecast called for a high of around 130 degrees at the park's Furnace Creek area on Sunday; leaflets at the visitor center warned "Heat Kills."

Because summer brings the highest rate of deaths among migrants trying to enter the United States illegally through Arizona, the Border Patrol added extra members to its elite search and rescue team. At least seven migrants had been found dead in the desert over the past week.

Monsoons normally bring rain and cooler temperatures to the region in July, but the heat has shown no sign of abating. Several Western states were under heat warnings on Sunday, with most of those expected to remain in effect at least through Tuesday evening. Meteorologists warned of the potential for forest fires in drought-plagued communities in Arizona, California, Colorado and New Mexico, as the clouds that build early in the monsoon season often bring lightning and wind but little or no rain.

In Arizona, a fire sparked by lightning near Prescott on Friday forced the evacuation of several subdivisions on Sunday afternoon as it continued to grow. Lightning had already started four forest fires outside New Mexico's capital, Santa Fe, on Friday. On Sunday, one of them was still burning.

"We're really kind of on the edge of our seats now and over the next week or two," said Todd Shoemake, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Albuquerque.

On Saturday, as the temperature reached 119 degrees in Phoenix, making it the city's fourth hottest day on record, US Airways canceled 18 of its regional flights because the maker of the smaller jets that fly those routes had provided performance statistics only up to temperatures of 118 degrees.

Todd Lehmacher, a spokesman for the airline, said there was no way to know for sure, for example, how long a runway the planes would need to safely take off. (For larger aircraft, the information covers temperatures up to 126 degrees, Mr. Lehmacher said. The highest temperature on record in Phoenix is 122 degrees.)

It has been so hot here in Phoenix that tigers at the zoo were served frozen fish treats and elephants were doused with hoses to keep them from overheating. Butterflies were found collapsed on the pavement, felled, apparently, by the scorching temperatures. Mesquite trees, staples of the desert, closed their tiny leaves to protect themselves from the heat.

"This is payback time for those days that we're happy not to be the ones shoveling snow out there," Marcus Morrison, 34, said as he stood at a bus stop here on Sunday, a wet towel draped around his neck.

A wispy layer of clouds moved over the city on Friday, trapping the heat like a lid on a pot of boiling water. Temperatures here had not dipped under 90 degrees since Thursday morning, and there was no sign of immediate relief in the forecast for Phoenix and elsewhere in the region. Forecasters say part of the problem is that ocean breezes have not been traveling far enough inland to cool the desert.

Ken Waters, a warning-coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Phoenix, said a strong high pressure system had been parked over much of the West for days. It is forecast to weaken during the week, but, he cautioned, "I'd be foolish to call it a cooling trend."

It is only on Friday that the daytime temperatures here and in several other cities, like Palm Springs, Calif., and Las Vegas, are expected to drop below 110 degrees. Overnight temperatures are also expected to remain high — above 90 degrees in some cities and, in others, almost there.

The heat did not stop tourists from going outside on the Las Vegas Strip, which was thick with pedestrians sweating through tank tops over the weekend. On Saturday, Deanna Harney, who had traveled from Boston to celebrate her sister's 50th birthday, threw her arms up to celebrate the hot weather, saying: "I love it! It's been raining back home."

Nearby, Joe Mendoza suffered under a Mario Brothers costume as he posed for pictures with tourists in exchange for tips.

"I brought frozen water bottles, and I drink at least one every hour," Mr. Mendoza said through a large foam head.

Most of the people he sees, he said, "don't look like they're having a lot of fun either."

Heath Haussamen contributed reporting from Las Cruces, N.M., and Lynnette Curtis from Las Vegas.

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Top Stories - Google News: Julian Assange: Edward Snowden is 'marooned in Russia' - Washington Post

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Julian Assange: Edward Snowden is 'marooned in Russia' - Washington Post
Jul 1st 2013, 00:48

Edward Snowden — the fugitive former U.S. intelligence contractor — appears to be stuck in Moscow, unable to leave without a valid American passport, according to interviews Sunday with two men who had sought to aid him: WikiLeaks' Julian Assange and Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa.

Snowden, 30, arrived at Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport last weekend, after previously taking refuge in Hong Kong. Moscow was only supposed to be a stopover. WikiLeaks, the anti-secrecy organization, had said Snowden was headed on to Ecuador — whose leftist president has been critical of the United States — and that he would seek asylum there.

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Now, however, both men said Snowden is unable to leave.

"The United States, by canceling his passport, has left him for the moment marooned in Russia," said Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, on ABC's "This Week With George Stephanopoulos." The United States canceled Snowden's passport last weekend. Assange criticized the United States, saying: "To take a passport from a young man in a difficult situation like that is a disgrace."

Correa spoke to the Associated Press in Puerto Viejo, Ecuador. For now, Correa told the AP, Snowden was "under the care of the Russian authorities."

"This is the decision of Russian authorities. He doesn't have a passport. I don't know the Russian laws, I don't know if he can leave the airport, but I understand that he can't," Correa said. He said that the case was now out of Ecuador's hands: "If [Snowden] arrives at an Ecuadoran Embassy, we'll analyze his request for asylum."

Snowden got from Hong Kong to Moscow by using a letter of safe passage from the Ecuadoran Embassy in London (where Assange himself has been holed up for a year, avoiding extradition to face sex-crimes charges in Sweden).

Snowden does not seem likely to get another such letter.

On Sunday, Correa told the AP that an Ecuadoran official at that embassy had committed "a serious error" by issuing the first letter without consulting officials back home. Correa said the consul would be punished, although he didn't specify how.

Correa's tone seemed to have shifted after a conversation with Vice President Biden on Friday. Where Correa had earlier been defiant, he now voiced respect for U.S. legal procedures.

"If he really could have broken North American laws, I am very respectful of other countries and their laws, and I believe that someone who breaks the law must assume his responsibilities," Correa said, according to the AP.

Snowden's escape plan — if it could be called a plan — was unlikely from the beginning.

After revealing himself as the leaker, he sought to hopscotch 12,000 miles from Hong Kong to Russia to Ecuador (perhaps by way of Cuba) — evading both U.S. law enforcement and the world's news media on a trip to the other side of the world.

Now, that plan seems to have led Snowden to a Russian airport terminal. And a shrinking set of options.

If he is not actually being detained by Russian authorities — and Russian officials have said that he is not — Snowden could continue to stay in the airport. Officially, he would not have entered Russia, since he would not have crossed passport control.

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Top Stories - Google News: Fire in Arizona Prompts Evacuation of 50 Homes - ABC News

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Fire in Arizona Prompts Evacuation of 50 Homes - ABC News
Jul 1st 2013, 00:51

A one square-mile wildfire burning in a central Arizona community has led to the evacuation of 120 homes that are threatened by the blaze.

Arizona State Forestry Division spokeswoman Carrie Dennett says no homes have been lost in the fire northwest of the Yavapai County community of Yarnell, but the blaze was within a half-mile of some homes.

The Yarnell Hill fire prompted evacuations in the Model Creek and Double A Bar Ranch areas about 85 miles northwest of Phoenix.

Crews are doing work around the homes to help guard against the fire.

The surrounding area contains an additional 450 homes, but those houses haven't been evacuated.

The fire started Friday but picked up momentum Sunday as the area experienced high temperatures, low humidity and windy conditions.

Two hundred firefighters are now working at the fire, but an additional 130 firefighters and more water- and retardant-dropping helicopters and aircraft are on their way.

The Red Cross said it has set up at Yavapai College in Prescott to provide refreshments for people who were evacuated and a break from the heat.

The relief agency said it's prepared to open a shelter there if the need arises.

Nearby, a 10 square-mile wildfire that began 12 days ago in the Prescott National Forest was 96 percent contained as of Sunday morning.

The Doce Fire forced hundreds of residential evacuations, but those evacuations have since been lifted.

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Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: halv

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halv
Jul 1st 2013, 00:42, by Word dewd544

Line 2: Line 2:
   
 

===Etymology===

 

===Etymology===

From {{etyl|non|da}} {{term|halfr||half|lang=non}}.

+

From {{etyl|non|da}} {{term|halfr||half|lang=non}}, from {{etyl|gem-pro|da}} {{recons|halbaz|lang=gem-pro}}.

   
 

===Adjective===

 

===Adjective===

Line 10: Line 10:
   
 

----

 

----

 
 
 
 

FACK'''

 
   
 

==Swedish==

 

==Swedish==

   
 

===Etymology===

 

===Etymology===

From {{etyl|non|sv}} {{term|halfr||half|lang=non}}.

+

From {{etyl|non|sv}} {{term|halfr||half|lang=non}}, from {{etyl|gem-pro|sv}} {{recons|halbaz|lang=gem-pro}}.

   
 

===Pronunciation===

 

===Pronunciation===


Latest revision as of 00:42, 1 July 2013

Contents

Etymology[edit]

From Old Norse halfr ("half"), from Proto-Germanic *halbaz.

Adjective[edit]

halv (neuter halvt, definite and plural halve) j

  1. half

Swedish[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Old Norse halfr ("half"), from Proto-Germanic *halbaz.

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

halv (neuter halvt, definite and plural halva)

  1. half

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Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: hálfur

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hálfur
Jul 1st 2013, 00:43, by Word dewd544

Line 1: Line 1:
 

==Icelandic==

 

==Icelandic==

  +
  +

===Etymology===

  +

From {{etyl|non|is}} {{term|halfr|lang=non}}, from {{etyl|gem-pro|is}} {{recons|halbaz|lang=gem-pro}}.

   
 

===Pronunciation===

 

===Pronunciation===


Latest revision as of 00:43, 1 July 2013

Contents

Icelandic[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Old Norse halfr, from Proto-Germanic *halbaz.

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

hálfur (not comparable)

  1. half

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